Patrick Dove/Standard-Times
Most animals are used for farming in rural Cambodia.

Patrick Dove/Standard-Times
A fisherman casts his net into a flowing stream to catch fish to sell at market.

Patrick Dove/Standard-Times
Children make their way to school in the small village of Banteay Toup, Cambodia.

Patrick Dove/Standard-Times
Most of the Cambodian countryside not used for farming is dense jungle.

Patrick Dove/Standard-Times
A boy rides his bike down the road near Sisophon, Cambodia.

Patrick Dove/Standard-Times
A man cleans his afternoon catch of fish as the local youth play in the flowing waters near Sisophon, Cambodia. Daily life in rural Cambodia mainly revolves around water, which is the major source for food and growing rice.

Patrick Dove/Standard-Times
Water buffalo wander through rice paddies in the countryside of Cambodia.

Patrick Dove/Standard-Times
Because of heavy rainfall, many of the rural areas were flooded during San Angeloan Toro Vaun's trip to Cambodia this fall, causing people to find other means of traveling between towns.

Patrick Dove/Standard-Times
A man rides a cart loaded with wood pulled by a cow down the road just outside Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

Patrick Dove/Standard-Times
Toro Vaun stands at the base of a waterfall on Phnom Kulen in Cambodia after participating in a ceremony where he had his head shaved in honor of his parents. This trip to his birth country marks the first time he has returned since immigrating to America in 1992.